With the help of robotics specialists, we can separate the truth from the hype.
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With the help of robotics specialists, we can separate the truth from the hype.
For more than a hundred years, innocent radio operators have occasionally stumbled upon a seemingly sinister secret: Radio stations set up by spy agencies. These stations, known as “numbers stations,” are meant to send coded messages to undercover agents. Since they broadcast in the clear, anyone can listen to them—but very few understand what the messages actually mean. Numbers stations started in World War I and have likely been in continuous operation ever since, operating in more or less the same way. A particular station will broadcast at a particular frequency, typically on the shortwave band. It may play music, or static, and at a predetermined time a voice—recorded or synthesized—will butt in to recite a series of number groups. These number groups are actually an encrypted message. Before an agent is dispatched abroad, both the agent and the number station have a matching set of “one time” pads—sheets of paper on which words are assigned random strings of numbers, usually only good once, on specific dates. Once in the field, the agent then listens to the numbers station, writes down a broadcast string of numbers, and turns to the one-time pad to decipher the message.
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